Close Menu
Best in Gaming
  • Home
  • News
  • PC Games
  • PlayStation
  • Xbox
  • Nintendo
  • Mobile
  • Editor’s Picks
  • Press Release
What's On
All New and Returning Vehicles Confirmed So Far

All New and Returning Vehicles Confirmed So Far

16 May 2026
Sea of Thieves Controversy Pushes Developer to Reiterate Community Values

Sea of Thieves Controversy Pushes Developer to Reiterate Community Values

16 May 2026
The 10 Greatest 2.5D Games To Play Today, Ranked

The 10 Greatest 2.5D Games To Play Today, Ranked

16 May 2026
Konami Game is Shutting Down in 2 Regions

Konami Game is Shutting Down in 2 Regions

16 May 2026
Subnautica 2 Players Aren’t Happy About Immersion Breaking Immortal Fish

Subnautica 2 Players Aren’t Happy About Immersion Breaking Immortal Fish

16 May 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Best in Gaming
  • Home
  • News
  • PC Games
  • PlayStation
  • Xbox
  • Nintendo
  • Mobile
  • Editor’s Picks
  • Press Release
Best in Gaming
Home » Nvidia CEO’s Defense Of DLSS 5 Gets Contradicted By One Of His Employees
News

Nvidia CEO’s Defense Of DLSS 5 Gets Contradicted By One Of His Employees

News RoomBy News Room20 March 20263 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Nvidia CEO’s Defense Of DLSS 5 Gets Contradicted By One Of His Employees

Earlier this week, Nvidia unveiled DLSS 5: an “AI-powered breakthrough” in visual upscaling tech that takes a “game’s color and motion vectors as input for each frame, then infuses the scene with photoreal lighting and materials.” The internet immediately reacted very poorly to its announcement, decrying it as an AI-gen slop filter.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang rejected that framing at a live event later in the week, saying everyone is “completely wrong” and DLSS 5 isn’t actually “post-processing at the frame level.” That would suggest a finer degree of nuance and control than the alleged “slop filter” that is modifying the final 2D image based on broad internet training data. 

But new details from Nvidia’s own “GeForce Evangelist” marketing specialist Jacob Freeman appear to contradict Huang’s framing of the controversial technology. PC gaming hardware YouTuber Daniel Owens asked Freeman if DLSS 5 is “effectively taking a single 2D frame as an input (with motion vectors) to create the output frame?” The Nvidia rep’s response was: “Yes, DLSS5 takes a 2D frame plus motion vectors as an input.” They continued, “DLSS 5 is trained end to end to understand complex scene semantics such as characters, hair, fabric, and translucent skin, along with environmental lighting conditions like front-lit, back-lit or overcast – all by analyzing a single frame.”

The less technically inclined among you may be asking what the gotcha is here. The issue is that this directly contradicts Jensen Huang’s previous statement on March 17. “It’s not post-processing, it’s not post-processing at the frame level, it’s generative control at the geometry level,” Huang said to Tom’s Hardware during a Q&A. “All of that is in the control — direct control — of the game developer. This is very different than generative AI; it’s content-control generative AI. That’s why we call it neural rendering.”

Basically, the NVIDIA employee is saying it’s a generative AI filter that uses a single image as a reference, and Huang is saying it’s not using a single frame as the reference; it’s using every aspect of the data, including the 3D geometry. 

In short, as Owens puts it, DLSS 5 is just using a screenshot and slapping a filter over top. This is why people online, already in backlash mode over the original demo, are now crying foul and accusing Huang of lying about DLSS 5’s capabilities in his most recent statement. It wouldn’t be the first time he was accused of misleading consumers. 

It sounds like DLSS 5 isn’t actually pulling any extra information beyond that. That also kind of explains why some of the lighting effects in the first demonstration look like garbage, because DLSS 5 is just using an image of the lighting and nothing else to generate something new. DLSS 5 isn’t some new-fangled geometry level rendering tech; it’s just AI slop 2.0, because it’s not doing anything a bog-standard generative AI filter doesn’t already do.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related News

Konami Game is Shutting Down in 2 Regions

Konami Game is Shutting Down in 2 Regions

16 May 2026
Pokemon TCG Live is Adding A New Game Mode

Pokemon TCG Live is Adding A New Game Mode

16 May 2026
WWE 2K26 Adding Rare Version of Rey Mysterio That Hasn’t Been Seen in 27 Years, But There’s a Problem

WWE 2K26 Adding Rare Version of Rey Mysterio That Hasn’t Been Seen in 27 Years, But There’s a Problem

16 May 2026
Forza Horizon 6 Pits Your Acura Against A Giant Mech

Forza Horizon 6 Pits Your Acura Against A Giant Mech

16 May 2026
Editors Picks
Sea of Thieves Controversy Pushes Developer to Reiterate Community Values

Sea of Thieves Controversy Pushes Developer to Reiterate Community Values

16 May 2026
The 10 Greatest 2.5D Games To Play Today, Ranked

The 10 Greatest 2.5D Games To Play Today, Ranked

16 May 2026
Konami Game is Shutting Down in 2 Regions

Konami Game is Shutting Down in 2 Regions

16 May 2026
Subnautica 2 Players Aren’t Happy About Immersion Breaking Immortal Fish

Subnautica 2 Players Aren’t Happy About Immersion Breaking Immortal Fish

16 May 2026
Top Articles
Blood of Dawnwalker Dev is Staying Quiet on Romance, and That’s Doubly Exciting PC Games

Blood of Dawnwalker Dev is Staying Quiet on Romance, and That’s Doubly Exciting

By News Room
Pokemon TCG Live is Adding A New Game Mode News

Pokemon TCG Live is Adding A New Game Mode

By News Room
May 19 is Going to Be a Super Busy Day for PS Plus Subscribers PlayStation

May 19 is Going to Be a Super Busy Day for PS Plus Subscribers

By News Room
Best in Gaming
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2026 Best in Gaming. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.